After the Rangers lost Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals in double-overtime on Saturday, goaltender Henrik Lundqvist was still angry about a goal that helped the Los Angeles Kings rally to tie the game the third period.

Kings forwards Dwight King and Marian Gaborik scored within the first 7:36 of the period to erase the Rangers' 4-2 lead, and the score remained tied until Brown scored in the second overtime.

Lundqvist was angry that King's goal, at 1:58 of the third period, was allowed to stand. He thought officials should have nullified the goal because King made contact with the goaltender in the crease.

While King and Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh were shoving in front of Lundqvist, Kings defenseman Matt Greene fired the puck at the net from the right point. King deflected the shot and fell Lundqvist, who immediately protested.

"I don't think it's a penalty, but you've got to stop the play if the goalie can't move in his crease," Lundqvist said. "It's not like I'm outside the crease. I play pretty deep."

Lundqvist said referee Dan O'Halloran ruled that the puck was already past him when King made contact.

"I don't buy it," Lundqvist said. "That's a wrist shot that I'm just going to reach out for and I can't move. It's a different game after that. It's such an important play in the game."

The Rangers, down 2-0 in the series after blowing two-goal leads in both games, must regroup as the series comes to Madison Square Garden for two games.

"You have to move on. It's a game," Lundqvist said. "We all battled. I battled. We played five periods. Obviously, the difference is not very big. Even the last game, the difference is not big. You just have to stick with it and believe in each other and what we're doing. It's good. It's definitely good enough; it's just one bounce here or there and it's a different score. We came up short in two games. Now we have to go back to New York and turn this around."